Chattanooga Times Free Press

WHERE’S OUTRAGE AGAINST HAMAS?

- Marc Champion

It’s something close to a law of nature that the farther people are from a conflict, the more simplistic their views about its causes and solutions. That couldn’t be more apparent now in Gaza, where Israel’s invasion is drawing howls of outrage around the world.

That outrage is well-deserved. There is no question that the Israel Defense Forces could and should be doing more to avoid civilian casualties. Yet the fact that the anger of so many is directed only at Israel is disturbing, because there are two armed forces responsibl­e for the deaths of Palestinia­ns in Gaza. The other is Hamas.

Hamas invited the Israeli invasion with the barbarism of its terrorist attack on Oct. 7, and it has been open about how it fully expected Israel to retaliate. Recent reporting by the Washington Post would, if verified, underscore that this was the purpose of its attack, dubbed operation al Aqsa Flood, and that Palestinia­n deaths weren’t a bug in that plan but an essential part of it. “The blood of the women, children, and elderly,” Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh said on Lebanese TV on Oct. 26, “we are the ones who need this blood, so it awakens within us the revolution­ary spirit.”

The way Hamas carried out its attack and is now fighting the war in Gaza demonstrat­es the organizati­on’s utter disregard for the lives of Palestinia­n civilians, too.

Consider the tunnels. Hamas built hundreds of kilometers of them under Gaza City to create an asymmetric advantage against the IDF’s vast superiorit­y in terms of heavy armor, troop numbers and more. It makes sense as military strategy, just like preparing the ground by intense aerial bombardmen­t made sense as military strategy for the Israelis. But Hamas did not build undergroun­d shelters to protect civilians during the war it was preparing to fight.

Then there is Hamas’ use of human shields, even beyond the 240-plus hostages it seized on Oct. 7. According to the IDF, Hamas has its headquarte­rs under Gaza’s main al Shifa hospital, locates its rocket launchers next to schools, and generally does its best to make it impossible to target Hamas without also hitting civilians. There is no reason to trust the word of the IDF — this is war and like all militaries at war, their job is to win, not to tell the truth. Nor does Hamas’ use of civilians as human shields excuse the IDF for killing them. But this isn’t the first Israeli incursion into Gaza. Journalist­s from The Guardian encountere­d Hamas troops within al Shifa in 2014.

It’s worth listening to how some prominent Arab journalist­s approach Hamas. Earlier this month, the Egyptian TV commentato­r Ibrahim Eissa slammed comments from Hamas official Mousa Abu Marzouk, who said the tunnels were there to protect Hamas fighters from Israeli jets and it was up to the United Nations to protect Gaza’s civilians. “Irresponsi­ble” and “disgracefu­l” were just two of the adjectives Eissa used.

This isn’t rocket science. Dead Palestinia­n civilians are an essential part of Hamas’ plan, whose goal was to draw Israel deep into Gaza, create a bloodbath, and expand the war by enraging and drawing in new players such as Hezbollah in Lebanon, Iran and Israel’s Arab neighbors. Most Arab government­s understand fully that Hamas is an equivalent to Islamic State that offers nothing to Palestinia­ns beyond poverty and death. Yet they are now silent on this because Israel is playing the role that Hamas assigned to it. Tragically, so are too many well-intentione­d people in the West.

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